Monday, August 11, 2014

Southpoint Fire Damage (View From Above)

Southpoint Apartments (most fire damage to rear center building)

Fire cause has been determined: Tenant left (for the day) a pot on the stove

Considering it took an army of firefighters three hours to bring the stubborn Saturday afternoon blaze under control, I'm actually surprised there's not way more extensive damage to the roof of the structure.

I just now noticed the time/date stamp on this iPhone video I took, which shows 5:02 PM on Saturday. Considering the first AFD engine was still a few minutes away, kind of gives you an idea of how far along the fire was before a drop of water was brought to bear

And of course it did not help that the initial arrival truck, Engine 1, had only one firefighter aboard.

18 comments:

Anonymous
said...

Until the state comes in and covers their part of the burden that U-mass is on a small town like Amherst, our school system and town government are going to have a take a long hard look at what is important in town. If we cut the school administrative cost by 25% we would still be much higher than the average per pupil but the 25% could go a long way in staffing public safety.

There are not perfect solutions but we might need better balance in our spending.

Public safety is not a priority for this town government. There are always funds for shade trees, public transportation, shelters, informational technology, and other "priorities". Larry Shafter had a better grasp on it.

Fire-schmire, there are many more $100k administrative jobs that can be created in the school system. Why would Amherst waste money on fire fighters. Fires happen occasionally, school is in every day starting in September.

To "Anonymous" who wrote: "Fire-schmire, there are many more $100k administrative jobs that can be created in the school system. Why would Amherst waste money on fire fighters. Fires happen occasionally, school is in every day starting in September."

You obviously have never had to face fire head on and painfully wait for the fire trucks to arrive while you watch your life go up in FLAMES and lose a 21-yr-old neighbor in the process. School is NOT "in everyday". And the safety of the town should be just as important as the education it provides! Fires are unpredictable. And this town should have the staff and equipment to handle these situations. I pray you never have to experience what many of us have had to.

This is apparently one of those very rare occasions where I agree with Ed. UMASS is not the cause of the AFD staffing problem. The fact that there is a major university with thousands of students, faculty, and staff certainly contributes to the call volume, however the department is understaffed 12 months of the year. We only need to look across the river to find a community with a similar population (base population that is...without our students) and call volume to find a department with double the minimum staffing level. If you look around the state at towns that have a similar population and call volume, you will find that AFD staffing is low. While the demand for our services certainly increases with the influx of students, we do not have adequate staffing to meet the demand in a safe manner year round.

At some point, residents, through their Town Meeting members and their override votes, have to say "no" to ever-increasing per pupil costs, for the simple reason that there are other things including public safety that have to be funded adequately out of our tax checks.

Show me an incident that illustrates how pad is understaffed during the summer months. There are no week ends full of drunk 20 somethings. There are no 3000 person drunk mobs. There is a sleep quite little suburban "town." Amherst is not a city, like Northampton. I fully respect the pad but do not believe they are understaffed during the summer.